Where to Sell Your Print on Demand Products in 2026: Platform-by-Platform Guide
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You designed the stickers. You priced them for profit (you read Part 6, right?). You've got your sample order from The Potato Club sitting on your desk, looking fantastic. Now comes the question that makes or breaks more sticker businesses than any other: where do you actually sell them?
Because here's the thing—it's not 2020 anymore. You can't just throw listings on Etsy and watch the orders roll in. The landscape has shifted. New platforms have emerged. Fees have changed. Audiences have migrated. The sellers winning in 2026 are the ones who chose their platforms strategically, not the ones who picked whatever everyone else was using.
This guide breaks down every major selling platform available to you right now—the fees, the audiences, the pros, the cons, and exactly who each one is built for. By the end, you'll know exactly where to list your first sticker and where to expand when you're ready.
Part 9 of The Print on Demand Playbook — a 14-part series on building a successful custom print business. We first touched on storefront options in Part 3: Starting a POD Business and factored platform fees into pricing in Part 6: Pricing for Profit. This is the full deep dive. For sustainable packaging and eco-friendly platform practices, check out Part 10: Eco-Friendly POD Options.
Why Your Platform Choice Matters More Than You Think
Most new sellers pick a platform the way most people pick a restaurant—they go where the crowd is. That's not wrong, exactly, but it's incomplete. Your platform determines four things that directly affect whether your sticker business survives its first year:
1. Audience
Etsy has buyers actively searching for stickers. Shopify has nobody searching for anything—you bring the traffic yourself. TikTok Shop has scrollers who didn't know they wanted stickers until they saw yours. Different platforms, different buyer intent, different conversion rates.
2. Fees
As we broke down in Part 6, a $5.00 sticker on Etsy nets you roughly $4.10 after fees. That same $5.00 sticker on your Shopify store nets you closer to $4.65. On a small sale, $0.55 doesn't seem like much. Sell 500 stickers a month and that's $275 you're either keeping or handing to a platform. Fees aren't the only factor, but they're a factor you need to understand before you commit.
3. Competition
Etsy has millions of active sellers. Your "coffee lover sticker" is competing against 40,000 similar listings. Your own Shopify store? Zero direct competition on your own website. But zero competition also means zero built-in discovery. Trade-offs everywhere.
4. Control
On marketplaces, you play by their rules. Their layout. Their review system. Their algorithm. Your own store? Your rules. Your branding. Your customer data. Your email list. The control question becomes critical once you start scaling—because the sellers who own their audience always outperform the sellers who rent it.
Platform Deep Dives
Let's get into the specifics. Every platform below is active, viable, and being used by sticker sellers right now. The question isn't "which is best?"—it's "which is best for me, right now?"
A. Etsy
The undisputed starting point for most sticker sellers. Love it or hate it, Etsy is where sticker buyers go to browse.
The Pros
- Built-in audience of 96+ million active buyers. People go to Etsy specifically to find unique, handmade, and custom products—including stickers.
- Search-driven traffic. Unlike social media where you need to go viral, Etsy buyers are actively searching for what you sell. Optimize your listings and the algorithm works for you.
- Low barrier to entry. Listing fee is $0.20. No monthly subscription required. You can open a shop today and have products listed by tonight.
- Seller protections and established trust. Buyers trust Etsy's payment system, review system, and buyer protection policies. That trust transfers to you.
The Cons
-
Fees add up fast. Here's the real cost breakdown on a $5.00 sale:
- Listing fee: $0.20
- Transaction fee (6.5%): $0.325
- Payment processing (3% + $0.25): $0.40
- Total fees per sale: ~$0.93
- On a $5.00 sale, you keep ~$4.07. Sell 100 stickers a month and you've paid $93 in fees.
- Intense competition. Search "sticker" on Etsy and you get over 2 million results. Standing out requires excellent SEO, great photos, and consistent new listings.
- Limited branding control. Your shop lives inside Etsy's design. You can customize your banner and about section, but the overall experience is unmistakably Etsy.
- Algorithm dependency. Etsy's search algorithm changes periodically. A listing ranking on page one today can disappear to page ten tomorrow with no explanation.
Best For
Beginners, artists selling original designs, niche sticker products, and anyone who wants to test the market with minimal upfront investment.
Setup Basics and Tips
- Shop name: Choose something memorable, easy to spell, and relevant to your niche. You can't change it later without contacting support.
- Shop policies: Write clear shipping, return, and custom order policies before your first sale. (Refer to Part 3 for our complete setup walkthrough.)
- Listings: Start with 10-20 listings. Etsy rewards shops with more inventory—the algorithm favors active shops with regular new listings.
- Photos: First photo is everything. Use a clean background, good lighting, and show the sticker on a surface (laptop, water bottle, planner). We covered photography basics in Part 3.
Etsy SEO Tips for Sticker Listings
Etsy search is its own game. These tips will give you an edge over sellers who just upload and hope:
- Front-load your title with keywords. "Coffee Sticker | Funny Barista Die-Cut Vinyl Laptop Decal | Caffeine Addict Gift" works better than "My awesome coffee sticker design #3."
- Use all 13 tags. Every unused tag is a missed search. Use a mix of broad ("sticker") and specific ("funny barista gift").
- Long-tail keywords win. "Sticker" has 2 million competing listings. "Bookish cat sticker for laptop" has maybe 500. The more specific, the less competition—and the more likely the buyer actually wants your product.
- Renew listings strategically. Etsy gives newer listings a brief ranking boost. Some sellers renew top performers monthly to maintain visibility.
- Encourage reviews. Five-star reviews improve your shop's search ranking. Include a thank-you card in every order asking for a review (and maybe a discount code for their next purchase).
B. Shopify
Shopify is the grown-up option. Your own store, your own domain, your own rules. It's what you graduate to when Etsy starts feeling limiting.
The Pros
- Complete branding control. Your store looks exactly how you want it. No competing shops in the sidebar. No Etsy logo in the header. Just your brand.
- No marketplace transaction fees. You pay payment processing (2.5–2.9% + $0.30) but zero marketplace commission. On a $5.00 sale, you keep ~$4.55 versus Etsy's ~$4.07. That difference compounds.
- You own your customer data. Email addresses, purchase history, browsing behavior—it's all yours. This is huge for remarketing, loyalty programs, and building a brand that outlasts any platform.
- App ecosystem. Thousands of apps for email marketing (Klaviyo), reviews (Judge.me), upselling, analytics, and more. Your store can become as sophisticated as you need it to be.
- Scalability. Shopify handles everything from 10 orders a month to 10,000. You won't outgrow it.
The Cons
- Monthly cost starting at $39 USD. That's money you're spending before you make a single sale. For a brand-new shop with zero traffic, this can feel painful.
- No built-in traffic. Etsy brings buyers to you. Shopify expects you to bring buyers to it. You need a marketing strategy—social media, email, ads, SEO—from day one.
- More setup work. Choosing a theme, configuring payments, setting up shipping rates, installing apps. Expect 10-20 hours of upfront setup versus Etsy's 2-3 hours.
Best For
Growing businesses with consistent monthly sales, established brands ready to invest in their own platform, and sellers who want to build a long-term asset they fully control.
Setup Essentials
- Pick a clean, fast theme. Dawn (free) is a great starting point. Don't overspend on themes—product photos and copy matter more than theme features.
- Keep navigation simple. Home | Shop | About | Contact. Sticker buyers don't want to navigate a maze.
- Set up abandoned cart emails immediately. Shopify's built-in abandoned cart recovery captures 5-10% of lost sales on autopilot.
- Connect Google Analytics and Search Console. You need to know where your traffic comes from, and SEO is your long-term free traffic engine.
Theme Tips for Sticker Stores
- Grid layouts work best for showing multiple sticker designs at a glance
- Quick-add buttons reduce friction for impulse purchases
- Product filtering by category, size, and theme helps buyers browse larger catalogs
- Mobile-first design—over 70% of e-commerce traffic comes from mobile devices
C. TikTok Shop
The wild card. TikTok Shop is the newest major selling platform, and for sticker sellers targeting Gen Z and younger Millennials, it's arguably the most exciting.
The Pros
- Viral potential is unmatched. A single well-timed video can generate thousands of sales in 48 hours. No other platform offers that kind of organic reach for free.
- Young, engaged audience. TikTok's core demographic (18-34) is exactly the sticker-buying demographic. These are the people putting stickers on laptops, hydro flasks, and phone cases.
- Native checkout. Buyers purchase without leaving the app. Fewer clicks = higher conversion rates.
- Trending audio and effects amplify reach. You don't need a production budget—a smartphone and creativity are enough.
The Cons
- Content-heavy. TikTok Shop requires consistent content creation. If you're not posting 3-5 times per week, you're invisible. This is a significant time commitment.
- Algorithm-dependent and unpredictable. What works today might not work tomorrow. Viral success is hard to replicate consistently.
- Newer platform with evolving rules. Policies change frequently. Features are added and removed. It's less stable than Etsy or Shopify.
- Lower average selling prices. TikTok audiences skew deal-sensitive. Premium pricing is harder to sustain here.
Best For
Content creators, artists comfortable on camera, trendy and meme-worthy products, and anyone targeting a Gen Z audience.
Content Strategy for TikTok Shop Success
The algorithm rewards watch time, saves, and shares. Here's what works for sticker sellers:
- Process videos: Film yourself designing stickers in Procreate. Speed it up. Add trending audio. These consistently go viral because people love watching art being created.
- "Where I'd put this" series: Stick your designs on different surfaces—laptops, water bottles, car bumpers, street signs (temporarily!). Show the sticker in real-world context.
- Pack an order with me: ASMR-style packing videos where you wrap orders, write thank-you notes, and seal packages. Oddly mesmerizing and great for building trust.
- New design reveals: Build anticipation by teasing a new design, showing the sketch, the digital version, the printed sample. Make your audience feel like they're part of the process.
- Sticker hauls and reviews: If customers share their stickers, repost (with permission). Social proof on TikTok is powerful.
- Hook in the first 2 seconds: "POV: you just designed the perfect sticker for book lovers" beats "Hey guys, today I'm going to show you..."
D. Instagram Shopping
Stickers are visual products. Instagram is a visual platform. This should be a match made in heaven—and it can be, with the right approach.
The Pros
- Visual-first platform perfect for sticker showcasing. Your product literally shines in photos and Reels.
- Highly engaged communities. Bookstagram, Planner Community, Studygram, Stationery Addicts—these are passionate niche communities that actively buy stickers.
- Shop integration. Tag products directly in posts, Stories, and Reels. Customers tap to buy without leaving the app.
- Brand-building powerhouse. Instagram is where you build aesthetic, personality, and emotional connection with your audience.
- Story and Reel formats favor creative product demos. Show the holographic effect. Demonstrate the waterproof quality. Peel the die-cut. These moments sell stickers better than any product description.
The Cons
- Requires consistent content strategy. Posting once a week won't build an audience. Plan for 4-7 posts/stories per week minimum.
- Algorithm challenges. Organic reach for feed posts has declined significantly. Reels get the most reach, but Stories and carousels drive engagement and loyalty.
- Setup can be finicky. Instagram Shopping requires a connected Facebook Business page, product catalog, and account review process. It's not as simple as "turn it on."
- Conversion rates are lower than Etsy. People browse Instagram for inspiration, not necessarily to shop. You're interrupting their scrolling, not catching them in shopping mode.
Best For
Visual products (stickers are perfect), brand building, artists who enjoy creating content, and businesses targeting aesthetic-driven niches.
How to Set Up and Optimize
- Switch to a Business or Creator account. You need this for Shopping features and analytics.
- Connect a Facebook Business Page and submit your product catalog for review (usually takes 1-3 days).
- Tag products in every eligible post. Even older posts can be updated with product tags—go back and tag your backlog.
- Use Stories daily. Polls ("Which design should I print next?"), countdown stickers for launches, question boxes for engagement. Stories keep your brand top-of-mind without demanding polish.
- Optimize your bio. Clear description of what you sell, link to your shop, and a visually cohesive grid that immediately communicates your brand.
E. Local Markets and In-Person Sales
The offline channel most online sellers ignore—and the one that can fast-track your growth like nothing else.
The Pros
- Direct customer feedback in real time. You see which designs people pick up first. You hear what they say to their friends. This market research would cost thousands in focus groups, and you get it for free.
- Zero platform fees. The booth fee is your only cost. Everything else is revenue.
- Immediate cash flow. No waiting for payout schedules. Money in hand, today.
- Customer relationships. Face-to-face interaction builds loyalty that online transactions can't match. These customers become your Instagram followers, email subscribers, and repeat buyers.
- No shipping logistics. Hand it to them, they walk away. Done.
The Cons
- Time commitment. Market days are full-day commitments including setup, selling, and teardown. A typical market runs 6-10 hours.
- Weather-dependent and location-limited. Outdoor markets in rain? Indoor markets with low foot traffic? These variables are outside your control.
- Limited scale. You can only sell to the people physically in front of you. Online scales infinitely; in-person doesn't.
- Requires physical stock. Unlike online POD where you produce after the sale, markets require inventory upfront. This is where a small bulk order from The Potato Club makes sense—die-cut stickers from $2.00 SGD, kiss-cuts from $0.16 SGD.
Best For
Testing new designs, building a local audience, validating product-market fit, and generating cash while your online presence grows.
Booth Setup Tips for Sticker Sellers
- Display stickers in shallow trays or on angled boards. Flat stickers on a flat table are invisible from three feet away. Get them vertical.
- Offer a "pick any 3 for $X" deal. Bundles move faster at markets than individual sticker sales. Price the bundle so your margin stays healthy even with the discount.
- Have a "new arrivals" section. Repeat market customers will check your booth specifically if they know you rotate designs.
- Accept digital payments. QR code for PayNow, card reader, or a prominent "Venmo/me" sign. Don't lose a sale because someone doesn't carry cash.
- Bring business cards or QR codes linking to your online shop. Every in-person customer is a potential online customer.
- Photograph your best-selling booth setup. When you find a layout that works, replicate it at every market.
F. Your Own Website (WordPress/WooCommerce)
The maximum-control option. WordPress with WooCommerce is free, open-source, and infinitely customizable. It's also the most technically demanding path.
The Pros
- Complete control over everything. Design, checkout flow, email automation, SEO, analytics, product pages. No platform restrictions, no policy changes, no algorithm updates.
- No monthly platform fee. WooCommerce itself is free. You pay for hosting ($5-30/month), a domain ($10-15/year), and any premium plugins you choose.
- Powerful SEO capabilities. WordPress is the most SEO-friendly platform in existence. With proper optimization, your sticker listings can rank in Google search—a traffic source no other platform gives you access to.
- Full ownership. Your site, your data, your rules. Nobody can shut down your store, change your fees, or compete with you on your own website.
The Cons
- Technical complexity. Hosting setup, SSL certificates, plugin management, theme customization, security updates. If "configure a DNS record" sounds intimidating, this isn't your starting platform.
- Traffic building takes time. Organic SEO takes 3-6 months to show results. You'll rely heavily on social media and email marketing to drive traffic in the early months.
- You're responsible for everything. Security, backups, updates, troubleshooting. When something breaks at 2 AM, you fix it—or you pay someone to.
Best For
Tech-savvy sellers comfortable with website management, businesses playing a long-term game, and anyone who wants maximum control at minimum recurring cost.
Multi-Channel Strategy: Don't Put All Your Eggs in One Basket
Here's what the most successful sticker sellers do in 2026: they don't rely on one platform. They build a multi-channel presence where each platform plays a specific role.
The Hub-and-Spoke Model
Think of your brand as the hub and each platform as a spoke. They all point back to the same place:
- Etsy = Discovery engine. New customers find you through search.
- Instagram = Brand builder. Followers connect with your story and style.
- TikTok = Growth accelerator. Viral content brings sudden bursts of traffic.
- Shopify/Own store = Profit center. Lowest fees, highest margins, full control.
- Markets = Cash generator and product tester. Immediate revenue with real feedback.
How to Start and Expand
Phase 1 (Month 1-3): Pick 1-2 platforms. Master them. Don't spread yourself thin across five platforms with mediocre presence everywhere.
Phase 2 (Month 4-6): Add a second channel. If you started on Etsy, add Instagram. If you started with TikTok, add Etsy as your storefront.
Phase 3 (Month 6-12): Consider your own store. By now you have consistent sales, know what sells, and have an audience to drive to your own site.
Which Platforms Work Together Best
| Combo | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| Etsy + Instagram | Etsy for discovery, Instagram for brand loyalty and repeat customers |
| TikTok + Etsy | TikTok for viral reach, Etsy as the trusted checkout destination |
| Shopify + Instagram | Shopify as your store, Instagram as your traffic driver |
| Etsy + Shopify | Etsy for new customers, Shopify for returning customers (redirect with promo codes) |
| Markets + Instagram | In-person sales funded, Instagram captures customers for online reorders |
International Selling Considerations
If you're working with The Potato Club, you're producing in Singapore and potentially selling worldwide. That's an advantage—Singapore has excellent international shipping infrastructure—but it requires planning.
Shipping From Singapore
TPC ships internationally, which means your customer base isn't limited to Southeast Asia. But shipping time and cost vary significantly by destination:
| Destination | Estimated Shipping Time | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| Singapore (domestic) | 1-3 business days | $1.00–$3.00 |
| Malaysia, Southeast Asia | 5-10 business days | $3.00–$8.00 |
| Australia, New Zealand | 7-14 business days | $5.00–$12.00 |
| United States, Canada | 10-18 business days | $6.00–$15.00 |
| Europe (UK, EU) | 12-20 business days | $7.00–$15.00 |
Tip: Set clear shipping time expectations in every listing. Underpromise and overdeliver. Customers who expect 14 days and get it in 10 are happy. Customers who expect 7 days and get it in 10 leave bad reviews.
Currency and Payment Processing
- Sell in the buyer's currency. Displaying prices in SGD to a US buyer creates friction. Most platforms handle multi-currency automatically, but double-check your settings.
- Account for currency conversion fees (1-3%) in your pricing. As we calculated in Part 6, this is a real cost that eats into margins.
- Popular payment methods vary by market. US buyers expect credit cards and PayPal. Southeast Asian buyers use GrabPay, PayNow, and bank transfers. European buyers want SEPA and iDEAL. Configure your payment options for your target markets.
Market Differences by Region
United States: Largest market for stickers. High competition but enormous demand. Price in USD. Expect price-sensitive buyers who comparison shop. Free shipping is essentially mandatory.
Australia: Strong sticker and stationery culture. Less competition than the US. Good market for premium and kawaii-style products. AUD pricing.
Asia (Southeast Asia, Japan, South Korea): Growing market. Kawaii aesthetic dominates. Lower average selling prices but high volume potential. Local language listings perform better.
Europe (UK, EU): Quality-conscious market. Willing to pay premium for eco-friendly and sustainable products—perfect if you're using TPC's eco-friendly options (more on this in Part 10). GDPR compliance required for customer data.
SEO Tips for Every Platform
Search optimization isn't just for Google. Every platform has its own search algorithm, and ranking well in platform search is free traffic you'd otherwise pay for through ads.
Keywords in Titles and Descriptions
- Research what buyers actually search for. Type a few letters into Etsy's search bar and see what autocomplete suggests. Those are real searches with real volume.
- Include keywords naturally, not stuffed. "Hand-illustrated botanical sticker featuring a monstera leaf in watercolor style" reads well and ranks well. "STICKER BOTANICAL MONSTERA PLANT LEAF GREEN VINYL WATERPROOF" reads like spam and ranks like it too.
- Front-load important keywords. Both Google and platform algorithms give more weight to words at the beginning of titles and descriptions.
Tags and Categories
- Use every available tag slot. On Etsy, that's 13 tags. On Shopify, use product tags for internal filtering AND SEO. On Instagram, use 15-20 relevant hashtags per post.
- Mix broad and specific tags. "Sticker" (broad) + "bookish cat sticker" (specific). Broad tags get impressions; specific tags convert.
- Choose the most specific category available. "Stickers > Die-Cut Stickers > Vinyl Stickers" is better than "Stickers."
Product Photography
Good photos don't just sell products—they improve search rankings. Platforms track click-through rates, and listings with compelling thumbnails get clicked more, which signals quality to the algorithm.
- First photo: Clean, bright, high-contrast. Show the full sticker design clearly.
- Lifestyle shots: Sticker on a laptop, water bottle, journal, car. Context helps buyers imagine owning it.
- Detail shot: Close-up showing print quality, material texture, and cut precision.
- Size reference: Include a coin or ruler so buyers understand dimensions.
- Consistency: Use the same background and lighting style across all listings. This builds visual brand recognition.
Reviews and Social Proof
Reviews are SEO gold. Platforms use review count and average rating as ranking factors. More reviews = higher visibility = more sales = more reviews. The flywheel is real.
- Ask every customer for a review. A handwritten thank-you note with "I'd love your feedback!" converts at 20-30%.
- Respond to every review. Positive or negative. Platforms see engagement as a quality signal.
- Feature reviews in your product photos. A testimonial carousel as your 8th photo adds credibility and improves conversion rates.
Platform Comparison Summary Table
Save this. Screenshot it. Refer back to it when you're deciding where to list.
| Feature | Etsy | Shopify | TikTok Shop | Instagram Shopping | Own Website | Local Markets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Startup Cost | $0.20/listing | $39/month | Free | Free | $5-30/month hosting | $20-200/booth |
| Transaction Fee | 6.5% + processing | Processing only | 1-5% + processing | 5% + processing | Processing only | $0 |
| Built-in Traffic | High | None | Medium-High | Medium | None | Foot traffic |
| Branding Control | Low | High | Low | Medium | Complete | Complete |
| Customer Data | Limited | Full | Limited | Medium | Full | Direct contact |
| Setup Difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Easy-Moderate | Moderate | Hard | Easy |
| Scalability | Medium | High | High | Medium | Very High | Low |
| Best For | Beginners, discovery | Growing brands | Viral potential, Gen Z | Brand building | Long-term control | Testing, cash flow |
| Time Investment | Low | Medium | High (content) | High (content) | High (setup) | High (event days) |
Recommended Starting Strategy Based on Your Situation
One size doesn't fit all. Here's our recommended starting combination based on where you are right now:
Complete Beginner (Never Sold Anything Online)
Start with: Etsy + Instagram
- Open an Etsy shop with 10-15 listings
- Create an Instagram account for your brand
- Post your design process and finished products on Instagram
- Drive Instagram followers to your Etsy shop via link in bio
- Budget needed: ~$30-50 SGD (listing fees + sample order)
- Time to first sale: 2-4 weeks with consistent effort
This is the path we outlined in Part 3 and it remains the most reliable starting combination in 2026. Etsy gives you discovery. Instagram gives you brand building. Neither requires a monthly subscription.
Artist/Creator (You Create Art, Want to Monetize)
Start with: Etsy + TikTok + Instagram
- Etsy as your storefront
- TikTok for viral reach and audience growth
- Instagram for brand aesthetic and community building
- Focus: Content creation is your superpower. Lean into it.
- Key advantage: Your design process IS your marketing. Film it, post it, sell it.
Small Business (Adding Stickers to an Existing Brand)
Start with: Shopify + Instagram
- Shopify store integrated with your existing website
- Instagram Shopping for product discovery
- Email marketing to your existing customer list
- Focus: Stickers as brand merchandise and customer acquisition tools. Include a free branded sticker with every order (as we discussed in Part 8: POD for Small Businesses).
Side Hustler (Limited Time, Testing the Waters)
Start with: Etsy only
- Keep it simple. One platform. Focused effort.
- List 10-20 designs. Optimize your titles and tags. Respond to every message.
- Reinvest profits into more designs and Instagram content when you're ready.
- Minimum viable time: 3-5 hours per week maintaining listings and shipping orders.
The Potato Club Advantage Across Every Platform
No matter which platform (or platforms) you choose, The Potato Club supports your POD business with:
- Die-cut stickers from $2.00 SGD — price point that works on every platform from Etsy to premium Shopify stores
- Kiss-cut stickers from $0.16 SGD — unbeatable for volume sales, add-ons, and sticker sheets
- Sticker sheets from $7.00 SGD — higher perceived value, perfect for Etsy and Instagram
- Custom cards from $7.00 SGD — greeting cards, wedding invitations, branded stationery
- Magnetic bookmarks from $7.50 SGD — the bookish community's favorite product
- Scratch cards from $5.00 SGD — unique product for promotions, events, and B2B sales
- International shipping from Singapore — sell to any market, we handle the logistics
- 2-3 day production turnaround — fast enough to keep up with viral demand
One production partner. Every platform. Global reach.
What's Next?
You know where to sell. In Part 10: Eco-Friendly POD Options, we explore sustainable materials and practices—increasingly important as eco-conscious buying decisions reshape every marketplace covered in this guide.
And if you missed Part 5: POD Products That Sell, it pairs perfectly with this guide—knowing what to sell is just as important as knowing where to sell it.
Ready to start listing? Get your custom stickers, sheets, cards, and bookmarks produced at prices that make every platform profitable → thepotatoclub.store/collections/custom-prints
Choosing your platform? We've helped sellers set up on all of them. Tag us @thepotatoclub.store on Instagram and tell us which platform you're starting with—we'll share platform-specific tips for your situation.
Part 9 of The Print on Demand Playbook — a 14-part series by The Potato Club. Read the full series:
- Part 1: What Is Print on Demand?
- Part 2: POD vs Bulk Ordering
- Part 3: Starting a POD Business
- Part 4: Designing for Print on Demand
- Part 5: POD Products That Sell
- Part 6: Pricing Your POD Products for Profit
- Part 7: POD for Artists
- Part 8: POD for Small Businesses
- Part 9: Where to Sell Your POD Products (you are here)
- Part 10: Eco-Friendly POD Options
Found this guide helpful? Share it with someone who's deciding where to sell their stickers. Use #PrintOnDemandPlaybook and #ThePotatoClub so we can cheer you on.